Lettuce Pray

Lettuce Pray

This week is my favourite of spring growing, and regardless of the amount of land that you have, even in a cityscape, you can do lettuce. I was raised Catholic and heard “Let us pray” many times in my young days, but I thought they were saying “lettuce pray”, which I didn’t really understand. Now that I’m growing lettuces, it makes much more sense! I share my current season’s efforts at year round lettuce.

I wish you days of greens, Becky

Lettuce Pray

Becky Cashman

Every year, for many years, I make myself the promise, that THIS year, I will not buy lettuce seedlings in punnets from the garden centre. But, every year, at some point, I either burn the little babies up because I forget to water them on a scorching hot day, or let’s face it, I just forget to water them on any kind of day. Sometimes I just don’t get round to even seeding up another tray. And off to the garden centre I go. Because when faced with it, I’d rather grow lettuce from seedlings bought at the garden centre than from the supermarket.

I’ve finally figured out one thing that has tripped me up year after year. If you wait until your last batch of lettuce is starting to climb high and go to seed, it’s too late. The trick with lettuce is to have them coming ready to eat in generations. So, about the time you are feeling totally flush with your last batch of lettuce, it’s time to plant new seeds.

Lettuce is one of the easiest and most satisfying plants to grow, regardless of whether it is in a container on your porch or in a garden. In summer, we have a salad most every day, which means we need to grow a lot of lettuce. Picking the salad for the evening meal is a hugely satisfying time of the day, and lettuce just picked is amazing to eat. You’ll never go back to store bought iceberg or hydroponic wonders.

Here’s my current version of growing lettuce from seed:

I tend toward the pick as you go loose leaf types of lettuce. I grow a lot of Green Salad Bowl (light and gently frilled), Cos (fat spines with upright leaves) and Danyelle (for red). But there are so many varieties of lettuce to grow, each with a slightly different leaf shape and hue.

Sprinkle lettuce seed thinly into a tray of store bought organic seed raising mix, pat down firmly, sprinkle water to wet through and cover with a damp newspaper for 5 days. I put the newspaper on to moderate the soil temperature, and keep the moisture more even. After that I take the newspaper off, and within days, up pop the most unbelievably small sprouts of lettuce. Hopefully, you really did sow thinly, or you’ll be seeing hundreds of them.

Keep the surface moist but not soaking, and in about another week to two weeks, (depending on temperature and light), the first true leaves appear. The true leaves are the first leaves that look like baby versions of what the adult will look like. These leaves come out after the 2 cotyledon leaves which are the embryonic first leaves. This is when I move them, each into their own space to continue to grow to the kind of size you’d buy from the garden centre.

Their own space can be just like the punnets of six that you get from the garden centre, or if you’re feeling bold, they can go straight into the ground. The biggest threat to baby lettuce is slugs. Slugs are eternally hungry, and in one night can wipe out a generation of seedlings, especially if they are only at 2 true leaf stage. If you plant them out and you know you’ve got slugs, I’ve done various things from surrounding the seedlings in pine needles, sand or walnut shells (which scratch a slug’s belly and slows them down) to a shallow cup of beer which the slug climbs into and dies a happy death.

I’ve diverged here a bit, but slugs will put a damper on passion, especially if you’ve just grown something from seed, so I’ll give you one more option that my friend Hanne uses in Karamea. She goes out with a torch in the hour after sunset and catches the slugs in the acting, feeding them to her chooks. She can collect so many that even her chooks say, no thanks.

This year I’ve planted about 80 seedlings in tightly packed groups surrounded by straw mulch. This way they provide each other the micro-climate of growing together, and the protection and richness of the mulch to care for them. I will thin them, by pulling the whole plant as needed.

If your lettuce looks a bit too light or yellow coloured, they are hungry. It’s not hard to feed a lettuce, they don’t require much food, and don’t like manure or heavy feeds, just give them a bit of mulch and they should perk up. They also love gentle liquid feeds like 10% diluted seaweed, water from soaked weeds or compost tea water which will give a beautiful deeper green look to the leaves and speed growth along.

Lettuce grows best in spring. Once summer comes, you’ll want to grow them where they can get a bit of shade. The full summer sun is just too much. Also, they like to be damp, but not wet, and prefer watering in the morning. If you leave them too dry, their leaves get bitter and your salad will taste more like medicine.

Once the lettuce starts to go to seed, I let some of carry on to produce beautiful flowers for the garden, and then drop their seeds back to the ground. The best seedlings of all are the volunteers that come up at just the right time in an impossibly tight group just under last years plant.

I also grow heaps of rocket, parsley, snow peas and calendula to have the extras of taste, colour and texture to make a salad that looks brilliant.

It’s been 6 weeks since I put the true leaf seedlings into the ground, and the lettuce are producing more than we can eat, by a lot! We’re rich in lettuce, but, as I AM able to learn from the timing mistakes of the past, last weekend I sowed another tray of lettuce. Now, all I have to do is remember to water them. Here’s to a whole season of growing lettuce from seed, lettuce pray.

Becky Cashman

I could be accused of being fringe. Food, water and air call to me to care, and I reflect my love as clearly as I can. Since that’s what you do too, then we can be fringe together: the fringe of change to understand and celebrate our connection to earth.

My children teach me to expand regardless of whether it’s comfortable. My husband and business partner John is my blessing, for everything that means. Goodbye Sandfly and Mind of a Guide are ever growing channels for teaching about the relationships that we can have with ourselves and each other. Join me in the adventure.

From You

“Thanks so much for your newsletters, which are a great time out moment to reflect on what’s important. This one on Happy Family Gardening (or happy family anything, actually) really resonated with me and I will keep its essence close when witnessing/dealing with the next big unreasonable argument in my household of 7 likely tonight ”

Nga mihi nui, NA Carolyn

p.s.

To venture causes anxiety, but not to venture is to lose one’s self…. And to venture in the highest is precisely to be conscious of one’s self. Sren Kierkegaard

Join us for a Nibble

About Mrs. Sandfly

Outdoors is Good used to be It's NOT about the Bugs, or iNAB for short. After 3 years of writing, we've finally figured out how to say it positively. I'm Bex Cashman, the product maker for the goodbye brands, as well as gardener, writer and moon lover. Oh, and Mum. It is my honour to share a moment with you.

Recent Posts

Are you on Instagram? So are we! We started @naturalgoodbye on Instagram and would love for you to join us. Launched in July after my daughter joined Instagram and I saw how lovely it is to communicate with pictures. We post photos of outdoor wonder, and fun, products in the wild, and quirky, vital natural […]